In my city on Pacific Coast Highway there is one where it meets two other boulevards. It's a challenging drive with no marked lanes or lights, and everyone is expected to merge in, go around to their destination, and exit. God help you if you don't stick to the perimeter, it's three lanes wide. It has caused tons of accidents (or rather the confusion of drivers did). Cops patrol it like hawks, waiting for you not to signal a merge or an exit. There's a local urban legend that the guy who designed it died on it. Mythical, sadistic, poetic justice.
A friend shared on FB a lunch place he was eating at today that included a map (as those posts do) with "The Circle" nearby. I said, "Even seeing The Circle on a map brings me anxiety, much less hurtling toward it down one of its arteries."
Just up the street are three streets that come together (none terminating like on the roundabout) that are controlled by lights and lanes with no drama. Which got me to asking, why do this?
The one that works (upper right):
A friend shared on FB a lunch place he was eating at today that included a map (as those posts do) with "The Circle" nearby. I said, "Even seeing The Circle on a map brings me anxiety, much less hurtling toward it down one of its arteries."
Just up the street are three streets that come together (none terminating like on the roundabout) that are controlled by lights and lanes with no drama. Which got me to asking, why do this?
The one that works (upper right):

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